Skip to main content

Georgia’s on Sandvik’s mind

Three Sandvik DX800 top-hammer hydraulic drills are said to be playing a key role in developing the new US$92 million Norfolk Southern Intermodal Site within Charlotte Douglas International Airport in the US state of Georgia. The site, in the Georgia town of Austell, encompasses nearly 200 acres of ground, with a granite rock formation lying less than 100m away from a very active runway of the very busy airport. The ground will be turned into an ‘intermodal yard’, meaning that cargo carried there on Norfolk
February 18, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
Three 325 Sandvik DX800 top-hammer hydraulic drills are said to be playing a key role in developing the new US$92 million Norfolk Southern Intermodal Site within Charlotte Douglas International Airport in the US state of Georgia.

The site, in the Georgia town of Austell, encompasses nearly 200 acres of ground, with a granite rock formation lying less than 100m away from a very active runway of the very busy airport.

The ground will be turned into an ‘intermodal yard’, meaning that cargo carried there on Norfolk Southern railroad cars will be off-loaded for further transport on tractor-trailers and vice-versa. It is estimated that over 200,000 cargo containers will be transferred in the yard each year, and by 2013 the intermodal project will replace a smaller operation in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Fulfilling a vital part in the project is Austell-based site infrastructure contractor Plateau Excavation. For these works, which began in early May 2012, Plateau is acting as the subcontractor to the Illinois-based construction and management firm, Milord Company.

In order to deliver their side of the project, Plateau Excavation is utilising over 50 pieces of heavy equipment on the scheme; including the three Sandvik DX800 hydraulic drills being used to bore directly into the granite shelf. The drills themselves are owned and operated by a Plateau Excavation subcontractor, Tennessee-based LK Gregory Construction Inc. The DX800's were supplied and serviced by the Buford, Georgia dealership, of Charlotte-based ASC Construction Equipment USA Inc.

“Although Sandvik was fairly new for us, we knew there was an excellent opportunity with Plateau Excavation,” said Jack Evans, ASC’s general manager at Buford.

The Sandvik DX800's were used by Plateau Excavation for initial rock excavation, before the firm turned to a vast array of machinery that it has at its disposal. Given constricted market conditions, Plateau Excavation is said to have discovered alternative methods of saving time and capital by crushing the blast rock into usable material onsite. Moving in a portable crushing operation, Plateau Excavation were able to reduce the size of the rock into everything from rip-rap, 34’s, 57’s, and aggregate base suitable for use on road beds and building pads. Once the granite was drilled and blasted, Plateau used a fleet of excavators to tear through the rock, channelling it along the fleet of articulated and off-road trucks to get the shattered rock to the crushing operation less than 305m away in order to expedite production.

On the Plateau Excavation project, the trio of DX800 rigs is averaging 213 to 274 borehole metres per day, with the routine being to have the drills bore for one or two days with the grades of the project spanning from .3 to .6 m in slopes to holes running 15.2 to 18.3m in the centre line of the future rail.

Averaging between 6,858 to 9,144m of blasted rock per blast is said to continually allow LK Gregory to stay in line with Plateau’s production standards.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Building a car dealership with machine control
    May 21, 2018
    Canadian contractor MB Ford Construction recently built a massive car sales facility in Canada. Meanwhile the highly specialised site preparation job was sub-contracted to another local firm, Rabb Construction. The new Dilawri Auto Mall was a sizeable, heavy civil project on a 6ha site. Rabb needed to level and grade the site for the four car dealer elevated building pads and their surrounding inventory lots and customer parking. The contract included excavating three storm water runoff retention ponds, wh
  • Tampere road tunnel - a strategic link for central Finland
    April 4, 2016
    Progress has been good for an important underground road link in Finland reports Adrian Greeman. Assuming all goes well, the new Ranta, or Lakeside, tunnel in Tampere will open in full six months early; traffic could be running by the end of this year. Work on transforming the rundown city centre with new developments will get a major boost. It is a major achievement on a four-year-long project bringing significant benefits to one of Finland's largest cities. From the government's point of view the scheme w
  • Doosan excavators key to Germany B 2 highway upgrade
    April 2, 2014
    Thannhauser + Ulbricht Straßen- und Tiefbau (TU) is employing four new Doosan DA30 articulated dump trucks (ADTs) and a new Doosan DX490LC-3 crawler excavator for the earthmoving work during the upgrade of Germany’s B2 federal highway. The machines being used by TU, based in Fremdingen, southern Germany, belong to the rental fleet of Rühle Maschinenpark from Untermünkheim-Haagen.
  • Sandvik's 'quiet' quarry solution
    February 6, 2012
    A Hanson quarry in Spain is now benefiting from the installation of lining plates in its crushing plant. The J Riera, Llinar del Valles Quarry in Catalonia is using WT6000 linings supplied by Sandvik in the plant's primary hopper. The material was chosen for this tough application as the quarry company wanted to reduce wear and tear on its equipment and cut noise from the site. The hopper is the main intake for feed material in the plant and the rock is blasted granite, with a high abrasive index and a maxi